Coordinated motions of
proteins are known to be relevant to their function. So farthe
study of protein dynamics largely relies on spectroscopic studies of part
of the proteins or indirectly by comparing the conformations assumed in
the presence of different substrates or ligands. While molecular
simulations can also provide information on protein dynamics, these
usually suffer from incomplete sampling of conformational space, and
become prohibitively expensive when exploring the collective dynamics of
large macromolecular structures. In this study, we explore the dynamics of
a well-studied allosteric protein, hemoglobin (Hb), to show that a simple
mechanical model based on Gaussian fluctuations of inter-residue distances
can efficiently predict the collective dynamics of the tetramer in the
liganded and unliganded forms; and more importantly the conformational
transition between the relaxed (R) and tense (T) forms of Hb assumed in
the unliganded and liganded conformations exactly coincides with the
structural change driven by the global mode. This is the first
demonstration of the intrinsic tendency of the Hb architecture to undergo
the T пр R transition, simply
by the action of the most cooperative mechanical mode that is uniquely
defined for the particular tetrameric fold.
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